* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Know What I want to Know What I learned
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Chapter 4 Unit 2 Mr. Ochoa 6 th grade teacher Objective: you will learn about Earth’s inner structures; Earths’ crust, mantle, and core. Starter: What do you know about the Earth’s Inner core? Know It is hot Made of Iron Different temperatures Many different layers What I want to Know How hot is it in the center of the core ? How big is it? How fast things go? What I learned Objective: you will learn about Earth’s inner structures; Earths’ crust, mantle, and core. Starter: What do you know about the Earth’s Inner core? (1 paragraph) They are produced after an earthquake; scientists study them to see how they traveled through earth. The layer of rock that forms Earth’s outer skin. A layer of hot and solid rock; 40 kilometers below the Earths surface. The Uppermost part of the mantle and the crust. A part of the mantle just below the lithosphere. A some what soft layer that can bend. A layer on molten metal that surrounds the inner core. A dense ball of solid metal. Have you ever dug a hole in the ground? If you dig down deep enough what do you hit? What else do you think is below the rock? Find the 4 most important things in that section on the poster Numbers 1-2 in the big Science book Pages 69-73 in the Note book guide Use pages 132-139 If you haven't finished your Earth Inner Core Art Activity, please finish it. Turn to page Mr. Ochoa 6 th grade teacher Objective: You will learn about convection currents and how heat is transferred. Starter: What are seismic waves? How are they related to earthquakes? Objective: You will learn about convection currents and heat is transferred. Starter: What are seismic waves? How are they related to earthquakes? In a room at your home, why is it colder near the floor than near the ceiling? The transfer of energy through space. Heat transfer within a material or between materials that are touching. Heat transfer by the movement of currents within a fluid. A measure of how much mass there is in a volume of a substance The flow of transfer of heat within a fluid. Turn to page 143 1-3 A, B, C If you finish early: Complete page 74-81 in the Notebook guide. Mr. Ochoa 6 th grade teacher Objective: You will learn about the Pangaea theory. Starter: What do you know about the continents? What is a continent? Can you name them? Have they always been in the same place? A theory that continents slowly moved apart over Earths surface. Alfred Wegener proposed that all continents were joined together at one point in history. Any trace of an ancient organism that has been preserved in rock or tree sap. Turn to page 148 Questions: 1-3 Notebook guide pages 78-81. Mr. Ochoa 6 th grade teacher Objective: You will learn about sea floor spreading. Starter: How do continents move? What is theory that the continents were once formed as one? Where does magma from Earth’s interior flow out onto the surface? What happens with the lava after it goes onto the surface? An undersea mountain range. A device that bounces sound waves off underwater objects and then records the echoes of these sound waves. The sea floor spreads apart along both sides of a mid ocean ridge and new crust is added. Deep underwater canyons The process by which the ocean floor sinks beneath a deep ocean trench and back into the mantle. c If you finish early complete pages 72-84 in the science notebook 149 Mr. Ochoa 6 th grade Teacher Objective: You will take the Chapter 4 Exam. Starter- What is subduction? What is a plate? Cracks in the continent that fit along a crack in the lithosphere. A theory that pieces of Earth’s lithosphere are in slow, constant motion, driven by convection currents in the mantle. Breaks in Earth's crust where rocks have slipped past each other. The place where two plates move apart. A deep valley that forms after spreading boundaries develops on land. The place where two plates come together or collide. Sliding Boundary A place where two plates slip past each other, moving in opposite directions. Turn to page 162 Questions 1-3 Turn to page 164 Complete questions : Use pages 132-162 If you finish early: Complete the science notebook pages 69-90, and pages 91-95. Complete the chapter 4 review 165-166 (1-25) Lastly, complete your math homework Ask for the next activity